Beck's signature weirdness is missed on 'Colors'
By Aaron Paskin | October 18, 2017It’s been clear for many years now that Beck can do whatever he wants.
It’s been clear for many years now that Beck can do whatever he wants.
As a child, I devoured “Archie” comics, intrigued by the cutthroat, perpetual chase for Archie, the main male character, by Betty and Veronica, two female best friends, not realizing the social implications of such relationships.
In its simplest form, the lovable Fox comedy “Bob’s Burgers” focuses on working-class hero Bob Belcher (H. Jon Benjamin) and his family’s everyday struggles, from financial to relational.
Marilyn Manson’s new album, “Heaven Upside Down,” is classically Manson, an album that fits in sonically alongside 1996’s “Antichrist Superstar” and 1998’s “Mechanical Animals.”
In a perfect world, every sitcom — no matter how jaw-clenchingly cheesy or overdone — would be like “Brooklyn Nine-Nine.”
Wolf Parade made their mark in the 2000s. The Canadian group’s 2005 debut “Apologies to the Queen Mary” was rambunctious and noisy, and it propelled the young Montreal driven indie rock movement.
Liam Gallagher is like a rebellious teenager who never grows mentally older.
Three episodes into its fourth season, “Broad City” is growing up, for better or worse.
“Blade Runner 2049” has arguably induced the most skepticism of any film in 2017. The original “Blade Runner,” released in 1982, spent over 30 years amassing a cult following.
Last Friday night a boisterous party lurked beneath the Brodhead Center.
I always feel a bit guilty waiting impatiently for new Four Tet material, especially since he’s so prolific.
With her newest album “Tell Me You Love Me,” Demi Lovato proved that she isn’t just the sweet, smiley girl from “Camp Rock” or “Sonny With a Chance” anymore.
Despite polarized reactions from audiences and critics alike, Darren Aronofsky's “mother!” is one of the best films of the year. Perhaps the negative reaction from reviewers and moviegoers alike can be attributed to a widespread confusion about the film’s message.
Godspeed You! Black Emperor is no stranger to build-up. Since releasing their 1997 debut “F#A#∞”, the group has thrived on swelling crescendos and slow escalation over the course of their often multi-movement songs.
It is human nature to obsess. Our obsessions distinguish us, drive us, destroy us.
Content warning: physical street harassment, sexism, gender violence
I’ve always been slightly deterred by EDM. The build-and-drop structure of the genre seemed formulaic and repetitive, the lyrics meaningless.
The first chapter in Rostam Batmanglij’s journey as a solo pop artist offers all the instrumental mosaicking, elusive vocals and touching, personal exposee he needed to jumpstart his own musical brand.
“The Mindy Project” is all grown up. After four years of workplace romance and pleasantly predictable hijinks, the show has finally reached its sixth and final season, which promises to find a happy ending for each of its characters.
Not so shockingly, “American Assassin,” the newest film from director Michael Cuesta, is no instant classic.